First Causative Verbs
Transform any action into an act of influence by adding '-aa' and shortening the root vowel.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- First Causative verbs show the subject causing an action to happen.
- Form them by adding '-aa' to the verb root before '-naa'.
- Shorten long root vowels: 'aa' to 'a', 'ee' to 'i', 'oo' to 'u'.
- Use them for direct influence, like teaching, feeding, or showing.
Quick Reference
| Original Verb | Meaning | First Causative | Causative Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Padhna | To read | Padhana | To teach |
| Khana | To eat | Khilana | To feed |
| Dekhna | To see | Dikhana | To show |
| Bolna | To speak | Bulana | To call / summon |
| Sona | To sleep | Sulana | To put to sleep |
| Seekhna | To learn | Sikhana | To teach (a skill) |
| Pina | To drink | Pilana | To give a drink |
关键例句
3 / 8Mujhe apni nayi photo dikhao.
Show me your new photo.
Main bachon ko padhata hoon.
I teach the children.
Ma bache ko khana khilati hai.
The mother feeds the child.
The 'L' Factor
If a verb root is just one syllable ending in a vowel (like 'kha' or 'pi'), always stick an 'l' in there before the '-aa'. It makes the word flow better!
Vowel Shrinkage
Think of the '-aa' suffix as a heavy weight. It crushes long vowels into short ones. 'Bol' becomes 'Bul', 'Seekh' becomes 'Sikh'.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- First Causative verbs show the subject causing an action to happen.
- Form them by adding '-aa' to the verb root before '-naa'.
- Shorten long root vowels: 'aa' to 'a', 'ee' to 'i', 'oo' to 'u'.
- Use them for direct influence, like teaching, feeding, or showing.
Overview
Ever feel like you are the puppet master of your own sentences? In Hindi, you often are! The First Causative verb is your secret tool for getting things done. It transforms a simple action into an act of influence. You aren't just doing something; you are making someone else do it. It is the difference between eating a delicious curry and feeding that curry to a friend. Think of it as the "helpful nudge" of the Hindi language. It is incredibly common in daily life. You will hear it at dinner tables, in classrooms, and even at the office. It turns you from a passive observer into an active participant in someone else's action. Yes, even native speakers get the vowel shifts wrong sometimes, so don't sweat it! Just remember: you are the spark that starts the fire.
How This Grammar Works
This grammar works by modifying the base verb to show that the subject is causing the action. In a standard sentence, the subject performs the verb. In a causative sentence, the subject directs the verb toward someone else. Imagine you are at a cafe. You don't just "see" the menu; the waiter "shows" it to you. That "showing" is the first causative of "seeing." It usually involves two people: the one who initiates and the one who performs. However, the focus remains on your involvement in making it happen. It is like a grammar traffic light—you are the one turning the light green for someone else to go. You are providing the means, the permission, or the direct help for the action to occur.
Formation Pattern
- 1Creating these verbs is like following a simple recipe, though some ingredients change shape when heated! Follow these steps:
- 2Start with the verb root. For
bolna(to speak), the root isbol. - 3Add the suffix
-aato the root. Now you havebola. - 4Add the infinitive ending
-naa. You getbulana(to call/make speak). - 5Watch for vowel shortening! This is the tricky part. Long vowels in the root usually become short.
- 6
aabecomesa(e.g.,jaagnabecomesjagana). - 7
eeorebecomesi(e.g.,seekhnabecomessikhana). - 8
ooorobecomesu(e.g.,bolnabecomesbulana). - 9For some one-syllable roots ending in vowels, add
-l-before the-aa. For example,khana(to eat) becomeskhilana(to feed).
When To Use It
You use the First Causative when you are directly involved in the action. Use it when you are teaching someone a skill (sikhana). Use it when you are showing someone a beautiful view (dikhana). It is perfect for caretaking scenarios, like feeding a child (khilana) or making someone drink water (pilana). It is also the go-to form for giving reminders or making someone remember something (yaad dilana). In a job interview, you might use it to explain how you "managed" or "led" a team to perform. It implies a direct, hands-on connection between your influence and the result. It is personal, active, and very common in warm, social interactions.
When Not To Use It
Don't use the First Causative if you are the one doing the work alone. That is just a regular verb! Also, avoid it if you are asking a third party to get something done by someone else. That requires the Second Causative (using -waa). For example, if you tell a tailor to stitch a suit, that's different from you helping someone put a suit on. If the action is purely internal and cannot be caused (like "to exist"), this form won't work. Also, be careful with verbs that are already transitive. While you can make them causative, sometimes the meaning shifts more than you expect. Don't force it if a simpler verb like karna (to do) combined with a noun works better.
Common Mistakes
The biggest trap is forgetting to shorten the root vowel. Saying seekhana instead of sikhana sounds a bit clunky to a native ear. It is like wearing socks with sandals—not illegal, but people will notice! Another mistake is confusing the First Causative (-aa) with the Second Causative (-waa). If you say khilwana when you mean khilana, you are saying you hired a caterer to feed someone instead of doing it yourself. Also, watch out for the -l- insertion. khana to khana (wrong) vs khilana (correct). Lastly, remember that the subject of a causative sentence takes the normal case endings, but the person doing the action often takes ko.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
Let's look at the hierarchy of action.
- Level 0: Intransitive (
girna- to fall). The vase just falls. - Level 1: Transitive (
girana- to drop). You physically drop the vase. - Level 2: First Causative (often overlaps with Transitive in Hindi). You make someone else drop it or you perform the action of dropping.
- Level 3: Second Causative (
girwana). You pay a guy to drop the vase.
In many cases, the First Causative and the Transitive form are actually the same word in Hindi. The real contrast is between doing it yourself (karna) and making it happen through someone else (karana).
Quick FAQ
Q. Is dikhaana the same as dekhna?
A. No, dekhna is to see, dikhana is to show (make someone see).
Q. Why does khana become khilana?
A. Because Hindi likes to add a 'l' to short roots to make them easier to pronounce.
Q. Can I use this for "making someone cry"?
A. Yes! rona (to cry) becomes rulana (to make cry).
Q. Does the gender of the verb change?
A. The verb still agrees with the object (in perfective) or the subject (in imperfective), just like a normal transitive verb.
Q. Is this formal?
A. It is neutral! You can use it with your boss or your cat.
Reference Table
| Original Verb | Meaning | First Causative | Causative Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Padhna | To read | Padhana | To teach |
| Khana | To eat | Khilana | To feed |
| Dekhna | To see | Dikhana | To show |
| Bolna | To speak | Bulana | To call / summon |
| Sona | To sleep | Sulana | To put to sleep |
| Seekhna | To learn | Sikhana | To teach (a skill) |
| Pina | To drink | Pilana | To give a drink |
The 'L' Factor
If a verb root is just one syllable ending in a vowel (like 'kha' or 'pi'), always stick an 'l' in there before the '-aa'. It makes the word flow better!
Vowel Shrinkage
Think of the '-aa' suffix as a heavy weight. It crushes long vowels into short ones. 'Bol' becomes 'Bul', 'Seekh' becomes 'Sikh'.
Remind Me!
To say 'remind', don't look for a new word. Just use 'yaad dilana' (cause to give memory). It's the most natural way to say it.
Hospitality Grammar
In Indian culture, feeding guests is huge. You'll use 'khilana' and 'pilana' constantly when hosting. It sounds much warmer than just saying 'eat'.
例句
8Mujhe apni nayi photo dikhao.
Focus: dikhao
Show me your new photo.
The root 'dekh' changes to 'dikh' and adds 'aa'.
Main bachon ko padhata hoon.
Focus: padhata
I teach the children.
Padhna (to read) becomes Padhana (to teach).
Ma bache ko khana khilati hai.
Focus: khilati
The mother feeds the child.
Khana becomes Khilana, not Khana-ana.
Usne mujhe party mein bulaya.
Focus: bulaya
He called/invited me to the party.
Bolna (to speak) becomes Bulana (to call).
Kripya mujhe rasta dikhaiye.
Focus: dikhaiye
Please show me the way.
Using the polite imperative of the causative verb.
✗ Main Hindi seekhata hoon → ✓ Main Hindi sikhata hoon.
Focus: sikhata
I teach Hindi.
Always shorten the long 'ee' to 'i' in the causative.
✗ Maine khana khaya → ✓ Maine use khana khilaya.
Focus: khilaya
I fed him.
Use 'khilaya' to show you caused the eating, not 'khaya' (ate).
Yeh gana mujhe purani yaadein dilata hai.
Focus: dilata
This song reminds me of old memories.
Dena (to give) becomes Dilana (to cause to give/remind).
自我测试
Choose the correct causative form of 'seekhna' (to learn) to say 'I teach'.
Main aapko Hindi ___ hoon.
The long 'ee' in 'seekhna' must shorten to 'i' in the causative 'sikhana'.
Which verb correctly completes the sentence 'Feed the baby'?
Bachche ko doodh ___.
Pina (to drink) becomes Pilana (to make drink/feed liquid) with vowel shortening.
Select the correct form of 'bolna' to mean 'to call someone'.
Usko yahan ___.
Bolna (to speak) changes its 'o' to 'u' in the causative form Bulana.
🎉 得分: /3
视觉学习工具
Action vs. Influence
Building the Causative
Is the root vowel long (aa, ee, oo)?
Shorten it (a, i, u) and add -aa + -naa
Vowel Shift Cheat Sheet
AA to A
- • Jaagna -> Jagana
- • Naachna -> Nachana
EE to I
- • Seekhna -> Sikhana
- • Peena -> Pilana
常见问题
21 个问题It is a verb form where the subject causes someone else to do the action. For example, dikhana (to show) is the causative of dekhna (to see).
Generally, you take the root, shorten any long vowels, and add -aa followed by -naa. Sona (sleep) becomes sulana (put to sleep).
Yes! Seekhna is to learn, and sikhana is to teach. They are the same root, just one is causative.
When a root is very short and ends in a vowel, Hindi adds an -l- to bridge the gap to the causative suffix. It's just easier to say.
Most do, especially action verbs. However, static verbs like hona (to be) don't have a direct causative; you'd use karana (to cause to do) instead.
The long o shortens to a u. So bolna (to speak) becomes bulana (to call/make speak).
You use the causative of rona (to cry), which is rulana. You would say Maine use rulaya.
Absolutely! It conjugates like any other transitive verb. Maine dikhaya (I showed).
Padhna means you are reading the book. Padhana means you are teaching someone else to read or teaching a class.
Yes, because causative verbs are transitive. You would say Usne mujhe sikhaya (He taught me).
Yes, you can khilana (feed) your dog or sulana (put to sleep) your cat. It works for any living being.
Then you're in luck! Just add -aa without changing the root. Chadhna (to climb) becomes chadhana (to help climb).
While it literally means 'to make speak,' in modern Hindi it almost exclusively means 'to call' or 'to invite'.
Use the phrase yaad dilana. Dilana is the causative of dena (to give).
No, -waa is the Second Causative, meaning you got someone else to do it for you. -aa is more direct.
Yes, it is perfectly polite. For example, Mujhe dikhaiye (Please show me) is very common in shops.
The long e sound in dekh shortens to an i sound in dikh when the causative -aa is added.
People will still understand you, but it will sound like a strong foreign accent. It's a good habit to practice the shortening!
Yes, it's maarna (to kill/hit). This is a slightly irregular but very common example.
Yes! Just use the polite form: Kripya mujhe sikhaiye (Please teach me).
Think of it as the 'Rule of Three': Root + Shorten + Add Aa. Practice with the top 5 verbs first!
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